William Bateman (bishop)

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William Bateman
Thomas Percy
Orders
Consecration23 May 1344
Personal details
Died(1355-01-06)6 January 1355
DenominationRoman Catholic
Arms of Bateman: Sable, a crescent ermine a bordure (engrailed) of the last. These were adopted as the arms of Trinity Hall, Cambridge, founded by him[1]

William Bateman (c. 1298 – 6 January 1355) was a medieval Bishop of Norwich.

Life

Bateman was the son of William Bateman, a Norwich citizen and bailiff who was an

Canon Law
.

In his thirtieth year, he was collated by Bishop

John XXII at Avignon. The young civilian's ability soon manifested itself, and the pope endeavoured to bind to himself one who seemed likely to fill an influential place in English politics.[6]

By his desire, Bateman took up his residence at the

Benedict XII (1334), by whose provision he was made dean of Lincoln, which dignity we find him holding in 1340.[6]

Clement VI, the king declaring that he was unable to send a solemn embassage until he had received satisfaction from Philip of Valois for his breaches of the truce. The same year, 19 December, the see of Norwich became vacant by the death of Bishop Antony Beke, and Clement gave Bateman the bishopric by ‘provision.’[6]

Bateman was consecrated by the pope at Avignon on 23 May 1344. A few months after his consecration, he was commissioned by the king to present letters to Clement for a final peace, and once more to treat with the ambassadors of Philip before the pope as mediator. The limits of this article forbid the attempt to particularise all the repeated and for the most part fruitless negotiations, in the prosecution of which the Bishop of Norwich was during the next ten years repeatedly crossing the sea accompanied by other ambassadors. To do this would be to give a summary of the history of the period. Suffice it to say that we find him thus employed on 28 July, 25 September, and 11 October 1348; 10 March, 13 April 1349; 15 May 1350; 27 June, 26 July 1351; 19 February 1352; 30 March, 28 August, and, finally, 30 October 1354 — an embassy in the fulfilment of which he terminated his life. His repeated selection by the king for these difficult and delicate negotiations is evidence of the confidence reposed in his wisdom, statesmanship, and intimate acquaintance with the tortuous policy of the papal court.[6]

On his consecration, Bateman carried out a visitation of his diocese. He asserted his visitatorial authority over Bury St Edmunds Abbey, which was resisted by the abbot. It was an old quarrel, inherited by both parties from their predecessors. It embittered the first three years of Bishop Bateman's episcopate, and brought him into direct collision with the judicial power. He excommunicated the abbot's attorney. The attorney brought an action against the bishop. A writ of error sued for by the bishop only resulted in the confirmation of the judgment. Bateman, however, repudiated the authority of a temporal court over spiritual persons, and refused either to pay the fine imposed or to absolve the attorney. His cattle and goods were consequently distrained, his temporalities seized, and his person was threatened with arrest. He appealed to the council called by Archbishop John de Stratford at St Paul's, on 25 September 1347, against this invasion of the privileges of the spirituality by the temporal power. How the matter ended appears not to be recorded.[6]

The same assertion of his rights was shown in his excommunication of Robert, Lord Morley, the lord-lieutenant of the county, for the crime of poaching on the episcopal manors. He compelled the offender to do public penance. A dispute with the commonality of Lynn as to certain municipal rights ended in a compromise.[6]

In 1349, England was visited by the

Clement VI for direction, who issued a bull authorising him to ordain sixty young men two years under the canonical age, a permission of which he availed himself to a very small extent’.[6]

One important outcome of this appalling calamity was the foundation in the following year, 1350, by Bishop Bateman of the college at Cambridge, to which, as a mark of his special devotion to the blessed Trinity, he gave the name of Trinity Hall. The bishop's object in this foundation, which was designed solely for students of canon and civil law, was to recruit the thinned ranks of the clergy of his diocese with men trained in those studies. For this purpose he became possessor of a hostel which had been purchased by John of Crawden, prior of Ely, as a place to which the monks of his house might retire for study, giving them in exchange six rectories in his diocese. His intention had been to found a master and twenty fellows, besides scholars, who were each to say a prescribed office, De Trinitate, on rising and going to bed, always to speak Latin, to dispute three times a week on some point of canon or civil law, and have the Holy Scripture read aloud during meals. The royal charter of foundation bears the date 20 November 1350.[6]

Bateman's death in 1355 prevented the full accomplishment of his scheme. At that time the body consisted only of the master, three fellows, and two scholars. A licence for building a chapel was given by the bishop of Ely on 30 May 1352, to which the founder bequeathed vestments, jewels, and plate.[6]

In the list of books given by the bishop to his new college theology is represented only by a small Bible, together with a Compendium and a Recapitulation of the Bible, all the rest being books of canon or civil law. His own private library, however, reverting to the college after his death, was more adequately furnished with theological works. Two years previously, in 1348, a clergyman of Bateman's diocese, Edmund Gonville, rector of Terrington, had obtained licence from Edward III to found a college for twenty scholars in honour of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin.[6]

Gonville died before his foundation had been fully established, and had he not named Bishop Bateman as his executor the whole design would probably have collapsed. Bateman carried out Gonville's scheme as a second founder, though with some important changes in its character, 21 December 1351. He removed the college to its present site, near his earlier foundation, and substituted for Gonville's statutes a selection from those of Trinity Hall, by which the requirement of an almost exclusively theological training was abolished. The first Master was Bateman's former chaplain, John Colton, later Archbishop of Armagh.[6]

On 17 September 1353 Bateman, as founder of the two societies, ratified an agreement of fraternal affection and mutual help between them ‘as scions of the same stock,’ the precedence, however, being assigned to the members of Trinity Hall, tanquam fratres primogeniti. Bateman's interest in the university of Cambridge, in which in his own words he had ‘received the first elements of learning, and, though undeservedly, the doctor's degree,’ had been shown at an earlier period by a gift of £100, as a sum from which members of the university might borrow on pledges up to £4. Such donations were at that period not at all rare.[6]

The last year of Bateman's busy life was marked by no less than three of those diplomatic missions on which he had so often, and on the whole, so fruitlessly, crossed the Channel. He was again commissioned, 30 March 1354, with

Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster, and Michael Northburgh, bishop of London, to treat before the pope concerning the king's castles and lands in France. The negotiations were prolonged. The new year found the commissioners still at Avignon. The delay was fatal.[6] A sudden sickness, popularly attributed to poison, attacked the bishop, and he died on the festival of the Epiphany, 6 January 1355.[8]

He was buried before the high altar of Avignon Cathedral, the patriarch of Jerusalem officiating, and the whole body of cardinals attending the obsequies with the exception of one detained by illness. Trinity Hall still preserves their founder's cup and cover of silver-gilt, bearing his arms. An image of the Trinity in a tabernacle, silver-gilt, given by him to the high altar of Norwich Cathedral, as well as a smaller one, shared the fate of superstitious images at the Reformation.[6]

Citations

  1. ^ As seen (with bordure engrailed) in a Baroque escutcheon at Trinity Hall, Cambridge (over B staircase), impaled by the arms of the See of Norwich. See image [1]
  2. ^ "The National Archives". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 25 March 2024.
  3. ^ "Debtor: John, the son of William Bateman". The National Archives. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  4. .
  5. ^ "John, brother and heir of William Bateman, late Bishop of Norwich". The National Archives. Retrieved 25 March 2024.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Venables 1885.
  7. ^ "Bateman, William (BTMN298W)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  8. ^ Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 262

References

Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainVenables, Edmund (1885). "Bateman, William". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 3. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

Religious titles
Preceded by
Antony Bek
Bishop of Norwich
1344–1355
Succeeded by
Thomas Percy